K. Male'
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16 Jul 2020 | Thu 12:18
The flight departed on Thursday morning
The flight departed on Thursday morning
Maldivian
Repatriation of Bangladeshis
152 more Bangladeshi nationals repatriated from Maldives
Over 3,000 undocumented expatriate workers have been sent back home thus far
The group was repatriated on Thursday morning, on a Maldivian flight bound to Dhaka
Economic Ministry is aiming to repatriate 20,000 expatriate workers within the ongoing year

An additional group of Bangladeshi nationals have been repatriated from the Maldives.

The country’s national airline, Maldivian carried out the repatriation on Thursday morning, where 152 Bangladeshi nationals were evacuated on a flight bound to Dhaka.

Undocumented workers are being sent back through the government-initiated programme, through the collaborative efforts from the foreign ministry, the Ministry of Economic Development and the Bangladeshi High Commission in the Maldives.

The exercise began after an announcement by President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, following the global Covid-19 pandemic infecting thousands of Bangladeshi nationals in the country, ever since the virus surfaced in the Maldives on March 7.

Earlier this month, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs revealed that the number of repatriated undocumented Bangladeshi workers living illegally in the Maldives, crossed 3,000 a few days into the beginning of the ongoing month.

Bangladeshi nationals are forced to reside in congested living spaces in large groups, after being brought into the country and are often left unsupervised. Due to this, they have been classified as vulnerable to the global Covid-19 pandemic, due to their lifestyles.

Speaking during a sitting of the People’s Majlis, the Minister of Economic Development, Fayyaz Ismail has since said that the government aims to repatriate 20,000 expatriate workers, willing to return home, within the ongoing year.

This comes at a time the issue of expatriate workers facing a long-drawn-out delay in their due wages, has also been rising.

Due to unpaid wages, groups of expatriate workers have been protesting across the country, and the protests have been escalating.

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